U.S. Supreme Court building with ExxonMobil and Suncor lawyers entering amid Boulder climate activists protesting, illustrating the climate damages lawsuit appeal.
U.S. Supreme Court building with ExxonMobil and Suncor lawyers entering amid Boulder climate activists protesting, illustrating the climate damages lawsuit appeal.
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Supreme Court to hear bid by ExxonMobil and Suncor to move Boulder climate-damages case out of state court

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The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review a Colorado Supreme Court ruling that let Boulder and Boulder County pursue state-law tort claims against ExxonMobil and Suncor over alleged climate-change harms, a case with potential implications for similar lawsuits around the country.

The U.S. Supreme Court on February 23, 2026, agreed to hear a petition brought by ExxonMobil and Suncor Energy seeking to block a Colorado climate-damages lawsuit from proceeding in state court.

The underlying case was filed in April 2018 by the City of Boulder and Boulder County (joined in the broader Colorado litigation by San Miguel County) and accuses ExxonMobil and several Suncor entities of contributing to climate change while misleading the public about the risks of fossil fuels. The local governments seek damages under Colorado law, including nuisance and other tort theories, arguing that climate-related impacts are imposing mounting costs on local taxpayers.

The Supreme Court’s review follows a May 12, 2025, decision by the Colorado Supreme Court that rejected the companies’ preemption arguments and allowed the lawsuit to continue in Boulder County District Court. In that ruling, Colorado’s justices held that the Clean Air Act displaced any relevant federal common law and that the act did not expressly, field-, or conflict-preempt the plaintiffs’ state-law damages claims, sending the case back for further proceedings without addressing the ultimate merits.

In agreeing to take the case, the U.S. Supreme Court signaled it will also consider whether the dispute is procedurally ready for review at this stage. The court is expected to hear arguments in the fall.

Oil and gas companies have warned that a broad ruling in the Boulder dispute could affect numerous similar cases filed by states, cities and other local governments across the country. Supporters of the local-government suits say state courts should be able to apply state consumer-protection and tort law to alleged in-state harms; the companies counter that climate-change emissions and energy policy are inherently national and international questions better handled through federal law and federal courts.

Separately, ethics questions have been raised in commentary about Justice Samuel Alito’s participation in the Supreme Court’s decision to grant review.

In a January 13, 2025, order denying certiorari petitions in a separate climate-liability case brought by Honolulu, the court’s records show that Alito did not take part in the consideration or decision. The Supreme Court’s public order granting review in the Boulder matter did not include a notation that he was recused.

Alito has faced scrutiny in recent years over undisclosed private travel reported by ProPublica, including a 2008 Alaska fishing trip involving hedge fund manager Paul Singer, and Alito later defended his decision not to recuse in matters involving Singer’s interests in a Wall Street Journal opinion essay.

A recent NBC News poll conducted Feb. 27 to March 3, 2026, found 38% of registered voters said they had “very little” or “no” confidence in the Supreme Court.

Correction and context

Some details circulating in commentary about Alito’s current stock holdings and about specific dollar amounts of particular oil-related investments were not independently confirmed from primary documents in the materials reviewed for this report. Likewise, claims about the exact number of homes destroyed in the 2021 Marshall Fire were not verified here; Colorado officials have widely described the fire as destroying more than 1,000 structures, largely homes, but precise counts vary by source.

사람들이 말하는 것

Discussions on X largely feature skepticism toward Boulder's climate damages lawsuit against ExxonMobil and Suncor, with users from energy and climate skeptic circles hoping the Supreme Court rules in favor of federal preemption to dismiss the case and similar suits. Posters argue the claims involve false disinformation accusations and represent activist lawfare circumventing Congress. Legal analysts highlight implications for nationwide climate policy via state torts.

관련 기사

U.S. Supreme Court building amid stormy skies with climate protesters holding signs about Exxon and Suncor lawsuit from Boulder County.
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Supreme Court to review Boulder-area climate tort case against Exxon and Suncor, asks parties to brief jurisdiction

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The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to take up Suncor Energy (U.S.A.) Inc. v. County Commissioners of Boulder County, a closely watched dispute over whether federal law blocks state-court claims seeking damages from oil and gas companies for climate-change-related harms. The justices also directed the parties to address whether the Court has statutory and Article III jurisdiction to review the Colorado Supreme Court’s decision at this stage of the litigation.

The US Supreme Court has unanimously ruled that a lawsuit by Plaquemines Parish against Chevron must be transferred from state to federal court, effectively voiding a $745 million judgment against the oil company. The decision stems from Chevron's activities during World War II as a military contractor off Louisiana's coast. Legal experts describe the move as frustrating but not a final win for the oil industry.

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The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments on whether the controversial Line 5 pipeline case belongs in state or federal court. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel seeks to shut down the pipeline due to risks to the Great Lakes, while Enbridge Energy argues for federal oversight. The procedural dispute could affect the pipeline's operation across the Straits of Mackinac.

On February 12, 2026, the Trump administration repealed the Environmental Protection Agency's 2009 Endangerment Finding, which had established greenhouse gases as threats to public health and welfare. President Trump and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced the move at the White House, describing it as the largest deregulatory action in U.S. history. The repeal undermines the legal foundation for numerous federal climate regulations.

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The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal from the U.S. Air Force over open detonation of obsolete munitions on Tarague Beach in Guam. The site holds cultural importance for the CHamoru people and sits above the island's main drinking water aquifer. A federal appeals court had ruled in favor of requiring environmental analysis under NEPA.

Six justices of Colombia's Constitutional Court recused themselves from reviewing the suspension of three government decrees issued amid an economic emergency for the winter crisis in Córdoba. Only three justices did not file recusals, halting the full court's decision on the validity of measures including a wealth tax.

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The U.S. Supreme Court issued an order on Monday allowing its April 29 decision in Louisiana v. Callais to take immediate effect, bypassing the usual 32-day waiting period. This enables Louisiana to cancel its congressional primaries and redraw maps before the 2026 midterms. The move sparked a sharp exchange between Justice Samuel Alito's concurrence and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson's dissent.

 

 

 

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